• View history
  • 3 Tour Dates
  • 4 Personnel
  • 5 References

History [ ]

For KISS, the transition between club and touring band took place rapidly. Following their final performances at the Coventry in December 1973 they wouldn't return to club environments until 1988 and essentially hit the road as a professional touring act. They'd performed just 24 club shows during the previous year. While there were a couple of additional shows, between the band's industry debut on New Year's Eve '73/74 and commencing touring activities in early Feb. 1974, these don't really qualify as being part of a scheduled tour -- those shows are included at the end of the "Club Era" section and include the January 8 showcase at the briefly re-opened Village East (formerly Fillmore East), at which the band had been rehearsing since December; and a return visit to the Academy Of Music on January 26. The band signing with the booking agency American Touring International (ATI) on February 1 coincides nicely as a marker separating the periods. Following the conclusion of the club era, it's somewhat surprising that KISS's first tour proper didn't even take place in the United States; or anywhere near to their home base of New York City. Instead, they headed to the great white north, Canada, departing New York City on February 3. This activity indicates the ethos with which the band would tour for the rest of the year: Have gig? Will travel! Simply put, the band was willing to do anything to get themselves in front of an audience.

Set list [ ]

  • " Strutter "
  • " Firehouse "
  • " Nothin' to Lose "
  • " Cold Gin "
  • " Kissin' Time "
  • " Let Me Know "
  • " Acrobat " (" Love Theme from Kiss ")
  • Gene Simmons bass solo
  • " 100,000 Years " and Peter Criss drum solo
  • " Black Diamond "
  • "Baby Let Me Go" (" Let Me Go Rock 'N' Roll ") [Encore]

Tour Dates [ ]

Personnel [ ], references [ ].

  • 2 Mark St. John
  • 3 Gene Simmons

'I was trying to get them laid' - what happened when Rush toured with Kiss

Kiss legend Gene Simmons fondly recalls the days when a fledgling Rush would regularly play support to the panstick-sporting rockers

Gene Simmons backstage eating spaghetti and Geddy Lee onstage

Everybody knows that Kiss bassist Gene Simmons has a long tongue. And most people know that he was partial to using it while spending time the many thousands of women the frontman claimed to have spent time with in his codpiece-wearing, fire-breathing heyday. 

But on the rare occasions when he wasn’t indulging in such behaviour, Simmons always put his tongue to another good use – hyping his own band. With the finely-honed instincts of the born hustler, Simmons never missed an opportunity to tell the world that Kiss were louder, wilder, crazier than the rest of his 1970s rocking competition. 

So even now, when he agrees to talk about his admiration for a band with a four-letter name that isn’t Kiss, it’s worth sitting up and taking notice. “We took Rush out as our opening act on either our first or second tour, I can’t remember which,” he explains. [The first dates the bands played together were September of 1974, two months before Kiss’s second album, Hotter Than Hell , was released]. 

“We were in a weird situation where we had already started headlining some 3,000 seaters even though we hadn’t had a hit record, so some of the dates were pretty big. I’d heard Working Man somewhere or other, and to me Rush sounded like the Canadian Zeppelin.” 

Simmons breaks off to do a fair-to-middling impression of Geddy Lee’s Robert Plant-influenced scream on Finding My Way . “So they had the kind of leanings that struck a chord with me. Plus they played and sang really well. Our point of view from the very start was that the entire concert experience should be a reflection of the headlining band, so we always took great pride in offering support slots to bands we liked. 

"We were about giving the people who came to the shows a real bang for their buck, so we never worried about money and buy-ons and all the rest of it. The attitude was that if the package was good, then the money would take care of itself. Our opening bands were a reflection of us. We never pulled the sound down on them. We always gave them full lights. 

"It was a cutthroat business, but we never did those things. We gave first tours to AC/DC , Judas Priest , Iron Maiden , Bon Jovi , Motley Crue , a whole bunch of acts... Rush was one of the first acts that we gave a break to – and time has judged that we made a good decision.”

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Kiss and Rush gig poster

Neil Peart had already replaced John Rutsey on the Rush drum stool at this point, but hadn’t yet shifted the three-piece towards a more progressive style. Yet even at that early juncture, the band seemed pretty, well, ‘musicianly’. Didn’t that worry Kiss, who for all their many attributes are not and never have been virtuosos? 

“They weren’t slack,” concurs Simmons. “And that was a great thing. Look, if you’re in the gym and the guy who’s next to you can lift more than you can, then you want to compete with him and you want to be better than him, right? 

"And anyway, you always have to be delusional when you get up on stage. It’s what makes you a champion. I was never concerned about who we were putting ourselves up against. You could have had cellist Yo-Yo Ma on the bill, who’s a way better musician than I’ll ever be, and I would always have backed myself! 

“But you’d be surprised! I remember sitting with Geddy one time back then throwing riffs back and forth. I told him about a bass run that I’d discovered that went from a major to a minor, then to a flat third, a kind of a European scale that then switched to a blues scale. But Geddy didn’t have a clue what I was talking about! He said ‘I don’t know what the notes are called. I just know how to play them.’ 

"Rush didn’t feel like ‘musos’ at the beginning. They were much more of a ‘meat-and-two-veg’ rock band at that time. But Neil read lots of books, and started to bring in that sci-fi, Isaac Asimov kind of thing. Plus he knew lots of big words like ‘condominium’! That was when things started to change. To be honest I always preferred the meat and potatoes stuff."

Kiss/Rush gig poster

Rush toured with Kiss at various points in ’74, ’75 and ’76. Naturally, the two acts grew close. “We were hanging with Rush after the shows, having lots of fun together. I was trying to get them laid...” 

With any success? 

“I’m pleading the fifth on that one to save their reputations! But they really were sweethearts.” 

Were Kiss’s blue collar all-American fans down with Rush? They are Canadians, after all... 

“They actually went down very well,” says Gene. “They didn’t really have their own fans turning up to see them in any numbers at that stage, but they weren’t all that different to us, so they appealed. It was all riff-based blues rock with a lot of bombast. They probably already had a few different time signatures by then, but it wasn’t progressive like it was to become. 

"It’s true that there wasn’t really what you’d call a Rush ‘live performance’, either, because Geddy was stuck to the mic playing bass at the same time as he was singing. So he couldn’t do any Robert Plant routines or anything like that. And Alex wasn’t exactly pulling any Pete Townshend windmills and splits, you know? The stage show wasn’t their focus. But people still liked them a lot.” 

While Gene’s bulging black book attests to the fact that there was plenty of fun to be had back then, touring in the ’70s was also reputed to be notoriously hard work. Were those Kiss/Rush tours physically tough? 

“It was gruelling! All that romantic talk of how amazing it was back in the day is all well and good, but it was demanding and you had to have a work ethic. Before MTV, cellphones and iPads there were only three or four TV stations and a few radio stations. 

"So the only way to get your music out there was to go to the people. I felt privileged to be doing what I was doing, but if you weren’t careful you could get beguiled and seduced by the lifestyle. There were chicks everywhere and we were getting paid $5,000 a night, which felt like good money back then. 

"But I always remembered the hunger I had when we started out and I was living in my ma’s basement. You have to hand it to the guys in Rush too. They were ‘all for one and one for all’. And even with all of the chicks and all the rest of it, they never let it get in the way of what they were doing."

While both bands went their separate ways after those early days together, both Rush and Kiss are confirmed survivors in an industry that notoriously eats its own. It’s surely pointless asking Gene whether he thought Kiss would survive for 40 years. But did he ever envisage Rush still being together in 2012 when he first saw the band perform back then in 1974? 

“I thought they’d become a big act like Zeppelin or Sabbath,” he says. “But when Rush went progressive I didn’t know if it would stick, because girls just don’t get prog. And there are no girls at Rush shows to this day! But congratulations and kudos to them for making it and doing it the hard way, by getting out there and working. Rush don’t hide away in their mansions. They’re out there doing it, just like we are.” 

Simmons isn’t trying to kid us that the two bands are still best buddies these days, though. “I went to see Rush a few years ago at the Forum in LA and I enjoyed watching them perform,” he explains. “But unfortunately I didn’t get to see the guys after the show for whatever reason. In truth it’s been a long while since we last saw each other.” 

We’ve got one last question. You’ve got room for just one Rush song on your desert island iPod. What is it? And why that tune? 

“Oh, that has to be Working Man. It will always be Working Man for me. Both musically and spiritually, that’s the essence of what Rush really are as a band. Those guys are true working men.”

This feature was originally published in Classic Rock's Rush - Clockwork Angels fanpack, in June 2012 .  

Howard Johnson is a music writer based in France. The editor of Rock Candy magazine, he's also written for Kerrang!, Metal Hammer, RAW, Q, MoJo and Japanese rock magazine Burrn!, and is a French football correspondent for World Soccer mag. He has also written a book on AC/DC, Get Your Jumbo Jet Out Of My Airport.

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kiss 1974 tour dates

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KISS Setlist at SAIT Gymnasium, Calgary, AB, Canada

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Kiss gig timeline.

  • Jan 26 1974 Academy of Music New York, NY, USA Add time Add time
  • Feb 05 1974 Dinwoodie Lounge Edmonton, AB, Canada Add time Add time
  • Feb 06 1974 SAIT Gymnasium This Setlist Calgary, AB, Canada Add time Add time
  • Feb 08 1974 University of Manitoba Winnipeg, MB, Canada Add time Add time
  • Feb 17 1974 Long Beach Arena Long Beach, CA, USA Add time Add time

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kiss 1974 tour dates

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  1. KISS's 1974 Concert & Tour History

    KISS's 1974 Concert History. Kiss (often stylized as KIϟϟ) is an American rock band formed in New York City in January 1973 by Paul Stanley, Gene Simmons, Ace Frehley, and Peter Criss. Over the years, the members of the band changed, but Stanley, Simmons, Frehley, and Criss remain the best-known lineup. Each of these original members created ...

  2. Kiss Tour

    Kiss concert chronology. Club Tour. (1973-1974) Kiss Tour. (1974) Hotter than Hell Tour. (1974-1975) The Kiss Tour was Kiss ' first album support tour. Sometimes known as the First Tour, it also encompassed several shows before and after the "official" dates.

  3. KISS Concert History Online

    January 1974 8 - Village East, New York City, NY **SHOWCASE 26 - Academy of Music, New York City, NY February On Tour: The First "KISS" (Tour) For KISS, the transition between club and touring band took place rapidly.

  4. Hotter than Hell Tour

    Hotter than Hell Tour (1974-1975) Dressed to Kill Tour (1975) The Hotter than Hell Tour was the second tour of the American rock band Kiss. The tour featured songs from their first album and their newly released second album, Hotter than Hell, which was the album that the tour was in support of. During this tour, the band used fire and the ...

  5. KISS Concert History Online

    KISS by State | Country Known live recordings list General tour set list archive Live Song Archive: By Song | By Album Definitive Video List, 1973-83 Tourbooks RELATED TOURDATE ARCHIVE: Peter Criss | Ace Frehley | Paul Stanley | Gene Simmons | Eric Carr | Vinnie Vincent | Bruce Kulick | Mark St. John | Cold Gin OTHER RESOURCES:

  6. The Early Days of Kiss

    Kiss Tour (1974) The Early Days of Kiss (also referred to officially as the Club Tour) was a series of performances by American rock band, Kiss. ... Tour dates. Date City Country Venue Support Act(s) January 30, 1973 2 sets New York City: United States Coventry — January 31, 1973 2 sets February 1, 1973

  7. KISS Concert Map by year: 1974

    View the concert map Statistics of KISS in 1974! setlist.fm Add Setlist. Search Clear search text. follow. Setlists; Artists; Festivals; Venues; Statistics Stats ... setlist.fm > Artists > K > KISS > Tour Statistics. Song Statistics Stats; Tour Statistics Stats; Other Statistics; All Setlists. All setlist songs (2955) Years on tour. Show all ...

  8. KISS Online :: KISS Chronology

    February 5, 1974 - KISS begins first North American tour in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, at the Northern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium, as an opening act. ... August 1974 - KISS begins recording their second album, Hotter Than Hell, in Los Angeles and is released October 22, 1974. Album sales are lackluster, but the band's live show starts to create ...

  9. On Tour: The First "KISS" (Tour)

    On Tour: The First "KISS" (Tour) ... While only comprised of three shows over four nights these dates do qualify as a proper tour, even if KISS were only filling in for another act. ... Better known for his live performances (his 1974 album was "Irish Tour '74," a live release) the contrast between he and his opening act was stark. At the first ...

  10. KISS Tour

    The Kiss Tour was KISS' first album support tour. Sometimes known as the First Tour, it also encompasses several shows before and after the "official" dates. Kiss took most of August off from the tour to record their follow-up album, Hotter Than Hell. For KISS, the transition between club and touring band took place rapidly. Following their final performances at the Coventry in December 1973 ...

  11. KISS Concert Setlist at Michigan Palace, Detroit on September 28, 1974

    Get the KISS Setlist of the concert at Michigan Palace, Detroit, MI, USA on September 28, 1974 from the KISS Tour and other KISS Setlists for free on setlist.fm!

  12. KISS Concert Setlist at Agora, Cleveland on April 1, 1974

    Get the KISS Setlist of the concert at Agora, Cleveland, OH, USA on April 1, 1974 from the KISS Tour and other KISS Setlists for free on setlist.fm!

  13. Kiss live at East Lansing [21-10-1974]

    Kiss live at the ''Brewery'', East Lansing (Or just Lansing), Michigan, USA, October 21st 1974, one of the first dates of the Hotter than Hell tour, actually...

  14. When Rush supported Kiss: Gene Simmons tells all

    [The first dates the bands played together were September of 1974, two months before Kiss's second album, Hotter Than Hell, was released]. "We were in a weird situation where we had already started headlining some 3,000 seaters even though we hadn't had a hit record, so some of the dates were pretty big.

  15. Destroyer Tour

    The Destroyer Tour also known as The Spirit of '76 Tour was a concert tour by Kiss, in support of their fourth studio album Destroyer. History [ edit ] At the time of the European leg of the tour the Destroyer album was already released and the band performed songs from that album, but they wore the Alive! costumes and had the Alive! stage show ...

  16. KISS Setlist at WABX Kite-In and Balloon Fly 1974

    Get the KISS Setlist of the concert at Michigan Palace, Detroit, MI, USA on April 7, 1974 from the KISS Tour and other KISS Setlists for free on setlist.fm!

  17. KISS Online :: Welcome To The Official KISS Website

    Thanks to John Rios for sharing his KISS Easter art with us! KISS Tour Dates, Klassic Videos, Music, Merchandise and More! Home of the KISS ARMY, Find KISS tickets and concert information from the official KISS website.

  18. Alive! Tour

    Tour was a concert tour by American rock band Kiss, in support of their 1975 live album Alive!. The tour began on September 10, 1975 and concluded on June 6, 1976. The tour began on September 10, 1975 and concluded on June 6, 1976.

  19. KISS: KISS Tour 74 Box Set

    Kiss made their live debut already back in January of 1973 but it was for the debut album, released on February 8th 1974, that a first real tour had been set up. So Kiss first tour started on February 5, 1974, in Edmonton, Alberta, at the Northern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium, as an opening act. Casablanca and Kiss promoted the album heavily ...

  20. KISS Concert History Online

    On Tour: Dressed To Kill. KISS' "Hotter Than Hell" tour had somewhat abruptly ended in Santa Monica, CA on February 1, 1975 after which the band returned to New York to complete work on their next studio album. With recording of their third studio album completed, and its release imminent, the band was ready to continue their progression up the ...

  21. KISS Concert Setlist at SAIT Gymnasium, Calgary on February 6, 1974

    Get the KISS Setlist of the concert at SAIT Gymnasium, Calgary, AB, Canada on February 6, 1974 from the KISS Tour and other KISS Setlists for free on setlist.fm!

  22. Rock & Roll Over Tour

    Rock & Roll Over Tour. (1976-1977) Love Gun Tour. (1977) The Rock and Roll Over Tour was a concert tour by the American heavy metal group Kiss. It began November 24, 1976 (shortly after the release of the Rock and Roll Over album) and ended April 4, 1977.

  23. KISS Concert History Online

    On Tour: The Return of KISS. Planning for the "Return of KISS" tour had commenced in November 1978 with two primary, and quite reasonable, albeit obvious, objectives: 1) Make money; and 2) Take the most spectacular show ever seen on the road. Within the context of KISS, neither of those objectives were particularly shocking or interesting.